According to a 29 April report in "The Guardian," Iraq recently received a shipment of
antiaircraft missiles from the Czech Republic via Syria in a military
buildup in expectation of an attack by U.S. armed forces.
The Czech Industry and Trade Ministry rejected this charge
and told CTK news agency on 29 April that none of the weapons named
in the article were sold to Syria this year and that direct weapons
sales to Iraq are impossible because of United Nations sanctions.
"The Industry and Trade Ministry did not license export of
these weapons in 2001 or this year and especially not to Syria and
Yemen," Anna Starkova, a spokeswoman for the ministry, told CTK.
"The Guardian" spoke with three Iraqi defectors who left Iraq
in the last six months. The men claimed that the first of three
deliveries arrived in the Syrian port of Latakia on 23 February.
According to "The Guardian" report, one of the defectors said he
knows that two more deliveries are on their way, if they have not yet
arrived. "The first consignment included anti-aircraft missiles,
rockets and guidance systems for Iraq's long-range variants of
the old Soviet Scud missile, all illegal under the UN embargo. The
shipment, which cost Baghdad $800,000, originated from the Czech
Republic under export licenses for Syria and Yemen. Its unloading at
Latakia was overseen by an Iraqi intelligence officer, L[ieutenant]
Col[onel] Khaled al-Adhani, who also oversaw its diversion from its
official destination by road to Iraq. One of the recent defectors,
Colonel Khaled Ayad al-Dilemi, from the 12,000-strong elite Special
Republican Guard, said that one of his fellow officers had also been
dispatched to Latakia to provide protection for the shipment," the
report said.